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Fishing capacity management in Asia- How The FAO IPOA - Capacity
can help
Regional Technical Consultation on Development of Regional Plan of Action-Management of Fishing Capacity
24-26 February 2015, Kuala Lumpur
Robert Lee & Simon Funge-SmithFAO Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific
Fishing Capacity Management ?• How to manage fishing capacity when the
total effort are not known?– Number of vessels and gears???
– It’s the gear that catches the fish not the boat
– Are MPAs, and fishery management measures enough. How many vessels and gear must leave the fishery? Open Access?
• How many countries in the Region have a NPOA - Capacity?– Malaysia, Indonesia,
• Who will lose and who will win?
• Can there be a WIN/WIN?
• Who has the mandate and responsibility to implement capacity management?
Overcapacity has lead to overfishing…• Overfishing beyond environmental and economical sustainability
– Needs for monitoring MSY and MEY– Lack of precise data on Vessels, fishers and gears– Need for Clear Objectives: Resource, Social and Economic– Partial implementation of policy Approaches and Strategies
• Overlapping Multi species and Multi fleet fisheries
– Different objectives for different fleet segments (Untangle)– SSF + Semi Industrial + Industrial– Different levels of negative environmental impacts– Conflicts between segments– Needs definition on where to reduce capacity
• Large processing capacity
• Needs raw materials• Provide employment• Finding the balance• Processing capacity can drive overcapacity
Capacity Drivers in Asia – 1.• Direct Subsidies
– Fuel, vessel construction, loans or compensation schemes, repairs, refit…
• Technological advances and adaptations and accumulated effect– lights, GPS, light attracting purse seine,
electronics, gear modifications
• Aquaculture development– driving demand for fishmeal
– keeps fish price low inside region, jobs, exports, economic development
• Domestic & regional diversity in fish consumption– preferences for a huge diversity of products
forms
Net repairs on a purse seiner
Capacity Drivers in Asia - 2 • Growing regional & international trade
– globalization, FTAs, advances in rapid transport, containerization, cold chain - airports
• Changing trade trends– local supply of fresh and consumption towards
iced, frozen for regional and global trade
• Added value through processing– Modern packaging, processing and products Improved
logistics and utilization of low value fish– added value is not passed back to the fishery
• Gaps and inconsistencies in governance policies– lack of capacity controls, weak MCS, foreign labour,
incomplete registries of vessel and fishers– Obsolete laws and/or non application of laws– Crisis management rather than Change Management
The policy makers dilemma• Competing interests
– Economic development vs. Resource sustainability– Reduce capacity but Proof of brighter richer future?
• Economic development, export income– driven by industry/ processors/exporters/fleet
owners and sensitive to trade issues and markets. E.g. EU IUU regulation ??
– strong lobbying power– important for exporting countries
• Social inclusion, livelihoods– rural development, poverty alleviation– votes – local politics– Limited alternatives– important for LDC and SIDS – Reducing conflicts
• International Context– International obligations, conventions vs. Local
Politics
• Sustainability is rarely the foundation of policy
surimi
Fish meal
Fish for processing
Managing capacity can impact stakeholders differently
• Companies whose only objective is to maximize profits at all costs
• IUU fishers and the companies that process their catches
• Companies and individuals that invest fishing profits into other sectors
• Laid off Workers in processing plants
• Indebted vessel and fishing company owners and the Banks that loaned the $$
• Temporary losses for fish traders and consumers
• Temporary economic losses for local governments
• not easily accept to leave or reduce effort
Arguments to not reduce• Asia Region produces >50 % of global capture fisheries
• 5 Asian States among top 10 global producers
• 49 of 58 million fishers are in Asia – Huge Labour Force (85%)
• Market demand increasing and lucrative
Sub region Annual Production trend 2000 -2010 % decadal increase/decrease
China Stable / fluctuation 1-2% +4
South Asia Fluctuation 5 – 8% +28
S.E Asia Consistent Increase 2 – 4% +29
Other Asia Relative stable -16%
Oceania Large decreases 2005 -2010 +9
surimi
Fish meal
Fish for processing
Managing capacity can impact stakeholders differently
• Fishing and processing companies that have sound financial capacity to persevere see longer term benefits
• They Need to persevere, diversify and adapt.
• Small scale fishers benefit from reduced overcapacity of industrial fleets and reduced conflicts
• Companies that invest in sustainability
• Aquaculture production
Fisheries Management – Why we must reduce Capacity
• 28.8% fish stocks fished at a biologically unsustainable level - OVER FISHED
• 61.3% FULLY FISHED
• 9.9% UNDER FISHED
• Global Fleet 4.72 million vessels
• 70% of 3.23 million boats in Asia motorized
• 49 of 58 million global fishers are in Asia –Too many men chasing too few fish
• Global IUU estimated at 10 – 23 Billion USD
• Something has to Change. Business As Usual cannot continue
Lessons learnt in Capacity Management
• Few politicians have the stomach to make the necessary reforms – cut production in the short run. No proof
• NPOAs exist but, how to measure success? Indicators?
• Lack of precise data on state of the resources, number of boats, fishers and gears (types, x numbers, x characteristics)
• Lack of human and financial resources to enforce regulations and collect data at landing sites and harbors. Budget ??
• Enforcement responsibilities and capabilities not coordinated
• Long slow process with no REAL end in sight
• Large inshore fleets relatively controlled, Offshore mainly uncontrolled. Flag State responsibilities ?
• Reducing fishers and limiting catches not easily accepted (
– Preference for banning certain gears, alternative livelihoods, MPAs WF study
Breaking the cycle
Reduced Profits
Reduce Costs and
Waste
Improved Profits
Increased Investment
Over and Excess
Capacity
Send Capacity Offshore
Cut Subsidies
Reduce capacity
enhancing Incentives
Manage and
Regulate Fisheries
Investment in
Processing
Create a new
problem
The International Plan of Action for the Management of Fishing Capacity
ftp://ftp.fao.org/docrep/fao/011/i0318e/i0318e.pdfftp://ftp.fao.org/docrep/fao/006/x3170e/X3170E00.pdf
History and Objective
Strategies to achieve the objectives
– Conduct National, regional and global assessments of capacity and improve monitoring of fishing capacity
– Preparation and implementation of national plans to manage capacity including urgent actions for coastal fisheries
– Strengthening of regional fisheries organizations and mechanisms
– Immediate actions for major trans boundary, straddling and highly migratory stocks and high seas fisheries
– Awareness raising, education, technical and regional coordination and cooperation
Key principles and Approaches
– Participate and cooperate to implement the IPOA
– Phased implementation - assessment and diagnosis (2000), management measures (2002) and periodic re assessment and results by 2005
– Holistic – National and International
– Conservation
– Prioritize already overfished fisheries
– New technologies and their positive and negative impact
– Mobility between fisheries discouraged
– Transparent implementation
NPOA Action Plan• Stakeholder dialogue & participation – EAFM
approach
• Specify the nature and extent of the capacity problem– Define actions to prevent, avert or reduce
– Different strategies for different fisheries
• Aligned with – current laws and policies
– International agreements and conventions
• Define objectives, goals and milestones
• Specify needs – Resources, Responsibility, When, Where and
• Monitoring, performance assessment timeline– Research, data and training needs defined
No universal definition for capacity• Capacity is an abstract concept
– Many inputs (#s boats, gears, areas, HP, tonnage, time, length)
• Proxy = Effort = Mortality
• Input capacity measurement – Number of Boats
– Number of gears
– Size of gears
– Fishing Days
• Outputs Capacity measurement– Total production, Production per vessel, Production by
gear
– Economic and financial returns
• Potential vs. Actual – Potential = hypothetical capacity that a fleet can
produce
– Actual = what the fleet actually produces
Excess Capacity vs. Overcapacity• Excess Capacity
– Short term
– Problem occurs production > Sustainable yield
– Fleet may be optimal for a period of time• Seasonal fishery
• Market price fluctuations
– Excess capacity does not necessarily mean overcapacity
• Overcapacity– Long term problem
– Number of vessels exceed MSY
– Catches decline after reaching MSY but fleet grows
– Fishing continues with no capacity management
• Both Excess and Overcapacity need to be addressed
Capacity Assessment process
Determine MSY and MEY
Target Mortality
Assess fleet capacity
Input / output
Determine target Fleet
size based on objectives
Adjust inputs and outputs
through management
and regulations
Monitor and Evaluate
Seasonality
Mobility
Overfished
Markets
Level of Degradation
Different fisheries
EAFM Approach
Stakeholder dialogue
Policies and processes
Landings, vessel size, age, power, gear type, time fishing, IT, transshipment, species, distribution, biological info, FADs, estimate MSY, CPUE, estimated biomass, mortality age/size, financial data. More details & more sophistication Multi fleet, multi species Sport, Artisanal and Highly migratory stocks
Conclusions for NPOA - Capacity• Develop a national definition of capacity and with
neighbors where these overlap
• Apply EAFM principles especially Stakeholder engagement, consensus and methods
• Develop NPOAs – Assessment, data, training, monitoring, define approaches and management measures, create incentives for change, MCS, monitoring
• Success depends– Transition planning, update legal frameworks
– Guarantee financing of the capacity management incl. training, research
– Reduce and eliminate subsidies
– Adhere to regional international conventions, agreements and foster partnerships – Like this workshop.
Suggestions for RPOA – Capacity Management • Create a Regional Capacity Implementation Task Force or other mechanism with Terms of
Reference and Agreed Mandate– Develop and agree on a Regional Definition of Capacity– Develop and agree on Regional Objectives, Principles, Approaches and Strategies– Develop an agreed Regional Assessment Methodology– Develop and monitor a Regional Harmonized Plan of Action– Desk studies and Case studies deeper understanding of Capacity Management– Economic and Financial Benefits and Justification of implementation of RPOA– Attract Funding to Support the RPOA – and Countries
• Regional Harmonized Plan of Action– Time frame with milestones– Country studies related to Regional MSY, MEY, Target capacity, Input and Output capacity– Capacity management Database – Define fields, location, reporting frequency, sharing– SMART Indicators for Member States– Training and Capacity Building, Management Measures– Linkage with the RPOA – IUU, Harmonized MCS and data sharing – Align and synergize with regional international conventions, agreements and foster partnerships
• Realign NPOAs to Harmonized Plan of Action– Conduct Assessments and Implement Monitoring– Update legislation and regulations– Guarantee National Budget to implement and monitor, statistics, capacity assessment– Transition planning, update legal frameworks– Reduce and eliminate subsidies
• Voluntary
Fishing Capacity Management ?• How to manage fishing capacity when the numbers
of vessels and gears are not known?
Assessments and NPOA supported by RPOA
• How many countries in the Region have a NPOA -Capacity?
All should have but BY WHAT DATE ?
• Who will lose and who will win?
IUU and Greedy Businesses
Serious about the future
• Can there be a WIN/WIN?
Serious about the future and resource conservation
• Who has the mandate and responsibility to implement capacity reduction?
RPOA, States and each and every one of us
Thank you
Ratifying countries
Ratifying Body Date of Ratification
Mozambique August 19, 2014
New Zealand February 21, 2014
Gabon November 15, 2013
Oman August 1, 2013
Seychelles June 19, 2013
Uruguay February 28, 2013
Chile August 28, 2012
Norway July 20, 2011
European Union July 7, 2011
Sri Lanka January 20, 2011
Myanmar November 22, 2010
Excess Capacity vs. Over Capacity
Excess Capacity Over Capacity
Short run Long Term problem
Fluctuating stock Both have to be addressed
Market fluctuations Assets in use > optimum MSY
VarIATIONS from year to year
SRYC >LRYC unsustainable
Capacity management = Removal of Excess and Over capacity